Huh. I wonder who gave you a downvote for this. It looks like good advice, and TBH in all the years I’ve been using Linux, since I stopped building the kernels myself I haven’t messed with targeted builds or any of the newer power saving options.
Yeah, CachyOS is like all those custom builds and performance tweaks you used to do shipped by default, or offered as easy options.
Another good example is the kernels. You can choose between schedulers that prioritize responsiveness or not, opt for features like core compaction (which try to keep other cores asleep in light loads) or sharing core cache, among other things. They’re all precompiled for different architectures and officially supported.
Huh. I wonder who gave you a downvote for this. It looks like good advice, and TBH in all the years I’ve been using Linux, since I stopped building the kernels myself I haven’t messed with targeted builds or any of the newer power saving options.
Good advice, thanks
Yeah, CachyOS is like all those custom builds and performance tweaks you used to do shipped by default, or offered as easy options.
Another good example is the kernels. You can choose between schedulers that prioritize responsiveness or not, opt for features like core compaction (which try to keep other cores asleep in light loads) or sharing core cache, among other things. They’re all precompiled for different architectures and officially supported.